Understanding Israel/Palestine TEACHING RACE and ETHNICITY

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Understanding Israel/Palestine TEACHING RACE and ETHNICITY Understanding Israel/Palestine TEACHING RACE AND ETHNICITY Volume 3 Series Editor Patricia Leavy USA International Editorial Board Theodorea Regina Berry, Mercer University, USA Owen Crankshaw, University of Cape Town, South Africa Payi Linda Ford, Charles Darwin University, Australia Patricia Hill Collins, University of Maryland, USA Virinder Kalra, University of Manchester, UK Marvin Lynn, Indiana University, USA Nuria Rosich, Barcelona University (Emerita), Spain Beverley Anne Yamamoto, Osaka University, Japan Scope The Teaching Race and Ethnicity series publishes monographs, anthologies and reference books that deal centrally with race and/or ethnicity. The books are intended to be used in undergraduate and graduate classes across the disciplines. The series aims to promote social justice with an emphasis on multicultural, indigenous, intersectionality and critical race perspectives. Please email queries to the series editor at [email protected] Understanding Israel/Palestine Race, Nation, and Human Rights in the Conflict Eve Spangler Boston College, USA A C.I.P. record for this book is available from the Library of Congress. ISBN: 978-94-6300-086-4 (paperback) ISBN: 978-94-6300-087-1 (hardback) ISBN: 978-94-6300-088-8 (e-book) Published by: Sense Publishers, P.O. Box 21858, 3001 AW Rotterdam, The Netherlands https://www.sensepublishers.com/ Printed on acid-free paper All Rights Reserved © 2015 Sense Publishers No part of this work may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, microfilming, recording or otherwise, without written permission from the Publisher, with the exception of any material supplied specifically for the purpose of being entered and executed on a computer system, for exclusive use by the purchaser of the work. ADVANCE PRAISE FOR UNDERSTANDING ISRAEL/PALESTINE Professor Spangler, sociologist and daughter of Holocaust survivors, has written an engaging, well researched, and provocative primer on Israel/Palestine. Her intellectual foundation lies in a belief in human rights for all, but her quest for historical and political understanding takes us on a brave and intimate journey into the consequences of Jewish privilege and Jewish victimhood, the agendas of imperial superpowers, and the Palestinian struggle for self determination. With sensitivity and candor, she challenges much of the dominant paradigm, examining the “complexities” of history, Islamophobia, as well as the price of political Zionism; the consequences of building a system of total subordination of Palestinians through settlement building, expulsions, pacification, and containment with the goal of creating an exclusively Jewish state. She finds “the parallels between the Back to Africa movement and Zionism … startlingly strong” and makes it painfully obvious that the US civil rights movement has indeed done far more for African-Americans than the existence of Liberia. There are important lessons to be learned. Professor Spangler challenges the reader with humor and an abundance of historical material and analysis to examine every sacred myth from indigeniety, race, Jewish existential fears, failures of Palestinian resistance movements, and the roles of hallowed organizations such as the Jewish National Fund, Jewish Agency, and Zionist organizations that began their work in the 1890s. Ultimately, she makes the case for the inherent dangers of establishing what is essentially a militarized Jewish ghetto in historic Palestine, based on systematic ethnic cleansing and sociocide, at a time in history when de-colonization, democracy, tolerance, and universal human rights are the basic standards for a civilized and sustainable world. Alice Rothchild, MD, author of Broken Promises, Broken Dreams: Stories of Jewish and Palestinian Trauma and Resilience, On the Brink: Israel and Palestine on the Eve of the 2014 Gaza Invasion, and producer and director of the documentary film Voices Across the Divide Just as one thought that all the primers that could be written about the Palestine- Israel conflict have already been published, Dr. Spangler proves us wrong with this sharp, poignant, well-documented dossier. Much more than merely a primer for newcomers to the issue, this factually-grounded overview buries tired slogans and provides readers with all the must-needed facts to grasp the conflict and get involved. Above all, knowing this comes from a researcher who understands that the current state of affairs are being propagated “in her name” gives hope that she can light the way for others in the Jewish community to reclaim their history and sense of social justice and contribute to realizing human rights, freedom and independence for all, including all Palestinians. Sam Bahour, co-editor of Homeland: Oral Histories of Palestine and Palestinians and business development consultant and activist based in Palestine Of the tens – or is it hundreds? – of books about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict that have seen the light of day in the past few years, this one is exceptional! It recounts a historical tale; it provides theoretical underpinnings; it does comparative work; it examines all the details and aspects of ongoing debates; and it brings all to life with real-life stories. Eve Spangler melds all of these together with spectacular sensibility and incomparable personal integrity. She is not afraid to take risks and to tell her readers the unpleasant, sometimes devastating, truths about the history of Zionism and the intractable, current situation in Israel-Palestine. She doesn’t hesitate to take the side of the weak against the strong and the victim against the victimizer. And she is not shy about offering an explanation and a resolution for it all through the construct of human rights. Still, the wonder of this book is its insistence on hope – not a naïve, idealistic hope, but one accompanied by a tool-box for concrete action that might right the wrongs of this tragic tale. Anat Biletzki, Professor of Philosophy, Tel Aviv University and Albert Schweitzer Professor of Philosophy, Quinnipiac University; Chairperson of B’Tselem, 2001–2006 Eve Spangler’s attempt to understand Israeli and Palestine and to convey its treacherous, incompatible histories is an ambitious and necessary work of stunning hope and humility. With a sharp pen and a keen eye, and above all with evident compassion for those about whom she writes, Spangler engages her students and readers in a journey that dares to break with familiar myths, while insisting on restoring the centrality of human rights as the universal guide to understanding the Israel/Palestine conflict. This is a work that is at once compelling and sobering. There are few like it. Irene Gendzier, Professor Emeritus Boston University This book is a monumental achievement. It sets the bar for subsequent writing on Israel and Palestine. Dr. Spangler wastes no time in addressing the core issue – Zionism – boldly naming it as the tragedy that it is, for Jews as well as for Palestinians. Cutting through the dangerous myths about Jewish safety and the equally damaging assumptions about the nature of Jewish identity that have driven attitudes and policies on Israel, Spangler takes on these core issues with stunning accuracy, directness, conciseness, and clarity. It is dawning on all but the most stubborn adherents to the vision of a Jewish national homeland that political Zionism is a tragic, if understandable, mistake, an unsustainable anachronism that is responsible for one of the most longstanding violations of human rights in the world today. As the daughter of Holocaust survivors, Spangler understands that the citizens of Israel deserve better, and that as a global community we are called, as we were when we brought South Africa into the community of nations, to liberate Jew and Palestinian alike from the evil of apartheid in our day. Besides serving up one the clearest descriptions of Zionism from the inside, Spangler’s crucial achievement is placing the Palestinian case in the global context. In her final chapter, Spangler draws the entire argument of the book together in making this fundamental point: this is a human rights issue. Her discussion of how the colonization of Palestine is a part of the nexus of globalization, and its relation to the spiral of oppression and powerlessness afflicting so much of the world today is alone worth the price of the book. This is bigger than Palestine. Spangler’s message is one that we ignore at our peril. Mark Braverman, Ph.D. Executive Director, Kairos USA. Author of Fatal Embrace: Christians, Jews and the Search for Peace in the Holy Land, and A Wall in Jerusalem: Hope, Healing and the Struggle for Justice in Israel and Palestine Oriented firmly around a human rights perspective, this book will be an extraordinary introduction to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict for many, as well as a good resource for those with some background in the conflict. This volume is both extremely well researched and admirably grounded, as much of it draws upon Spangler’s experiences taking student study groups to the occupied Palestinian territory of the West Bank and to Israel. Both the analytical sections and the narrative sections are eloquently delivered. Spangler masterfully brings many voices into the text, including those of prominent Palestinians and Israelis, Palestinians whose everyday experiences of conflict are rarely recognized, and Americans who encounter this issue from multiple perspectives and experiential
Recommended publications
  • REVIEW Donald E. Wagner and Walter T. Davis, Eds. Zionism and the Quest for Justice in the Holy Land
    Studies in Christian-Jewish Relations REVIEW Donald E. Wagner and Walter T. Davis, Eds. Zionism and the Quest for Justice in the Holy Land (Eugene, OR: Pickwick Publications, 2014), paperback, xxiii + 250 pp. Robert Cathey, McCormick Theological Seminary and Jay Moses, Hope Presbyterian Church, Wheaton, Illinois The book seeks to continue debates about the long sought- after reconciliation of diverse peoples in the modern state of Israel and Palestine (or the Occupied Palestinian Territories, including Jerusalem, Gaza, and the West Bank). Much mate- rial in this collection of articles was previously available in a curriculum written and edited by Mark Braverman, Pauline Coffman, et al., Zionism Unsettled: A Congregational Study Guide (Louisville: Israel / Palestine Mission Network of the Presbyterian Church U.S.A., 2014). The briefer curriculum caught the secular media’s attention and prompted disputes within the Presbyterian Church U.S.A. Copies were first sold on and then later removed from the de- nomination’s official website prior to the meeting of its General Assembly in June 2014, the same Assembly that made the decision to divest the denomination’s holdings in three multi-national corporations accused of providing support for the Israeli occupation of East Jerusalem and the West Bank and the blockade of Gaza. The curriculum was viewed as highly provocative, not simply by the Jewish community, but also by mainstream Presbyterians who work for the cause of justice and peace in the region. Those opposed to the cur- riculum believed it used the lens of a neo-replacement theology, turning a critique of the state of Israel into a critique of the Jewish people and of Judaism.
    [Show full text]
  • Jews Step Forward
    The Link www.ameu.org Page 1 Published by Americans for The Link Middle East Understanding, Inc. Volume 52, Issue 1 Link Archives: www.ameu.org January-March 2019 Jews Step Forward By Documentary Filmmaker Marjorie Wright The Link www.ameu.org Page 2 AMEU Board of Directors Jane Adas, President About This Issue Elizabeth D. Barlow Earlier this year I was invited to a showing of the documentary film Edward Dillon Jews Step Forward. Henrietta Goelet John Goelet At the end, with the film credits running, I recall whispering to the Richard Hobson,Treasurer person next to me that it was the most powerful documentary I had Anne R. Joyce, Vice President seen on the subject of Jewish-American support for Palestinian rights. Janet McMahon This was not yet another “talking heads” shoot. Rather, it wove the John F. Mahoney, Ex. Director biographies of the individuals interviewed with historic footage of the Darrel D. Meyers events that shaped their lives: from the Holocaust to the Nakba, from Brian Mulligan Kristallnacht to Israel’s military occupation. Daniel Norton Thomas Suárez And not only had I not heard of the film, I didn’t recognize the name of the filmmaker. All the more surprising since, as Google President-Emeritus would later enlighten me, Marjorie Wright, in 2008, wrote and co- Robert L. Norberg produced “Voices from Inside, Israelis Speak,” which received the Arpa Foundation’s Armin T. Wegner award for its promotion of social AMEU justice and human rights. And, again, in 2013, Marjorie was executive National Council director of “Voices Across the Divide,” that chronicled the Palestinian Kathleen Christison narrative of loss, occupation, statelessness and immigration to the Henry Clifford Paul Findley United States.
    [Show full text]
  • Rizek Abusharr Was Born in Jerusalem in 1936. His Ancestors in Jerusalem Go Back 500 Years
    Rizek Abusharr was born in Jerusalem in 1936. His ancestors in Jerusalem go back 500 years. Rizek was educated at Terra Sancta College in Jerusalem and Nazareth and at George Williams College in Chicago in the United States. Rizek worked for the Jerusalem YMCA for 51 years, concluding his service as Director General. He served as Session Clerk and as Clerk of the Presbytery of Jerusalem of the Church of Scotland. The Jerusalem YMCA was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize by the Austrian Parliament due to Rizek’s work with Arab and Jewish youth toward peaceful coexistence. He was awarded the “Martha Prize for Tolerance and Democratic Values.” Alice Abusharr was born in Jerusalem in 1935. Her grandfather, an Armenian, was the first local photographer in Jerusalem. Alice completed her schooling at the St. Joseph French School in Jerusalem and speaks Arabic, English, French and Hebrew. Alice worked at the Jerusalem YMCA after raising her two sons. Rizek and Alice moved to Pilgrim Place at Claremont California is 2006 and have worked together in offering travel courses to Palestine since that time. Rev. Allan Boesak's engagement in the struggle for a free South Africa brought him to leadership in the African National Congress where he worked closely with Archbishop Desmond Tutu. A theologian in the Reformed tradition, Dr. Boesak is a former leader of the World Alliance of Reformed Churches. He is currently an affiliated professor at the International Institute for Studies in Race, Reconciliation and Social Justice, University of the Free State in Bloemfontein, South Africa. Dr.
    [Show full text]
  • Sabeel's Theology of Contempt
    Sabeel’s Theology of Contempt Injecting Anti-Israel and Antisemitic Activism into Churches June 2015 This report was produced by BDS in the Pews A Project of NGO Monitor NGO Monitor's mission is to provide information and analysis, promote accountability, and support discussion on the reports and activities of NGOs claiming to advance human rights and humanitarian agendas. 1 Ben-Maimon Blvd. Jerusalem 92262, Israel Tel: +972-2-566-1020 Fax: +972-77-511-7030 [email protected] www.ngo-monitor.org (ע"ר The Amutah for NGO Responsibility (R.A. #580465508 © 2015 NGO Monitor. All rights reserved. Organization in Special consultative status with the UN Economic and Social Council since 2013 Table of Contents Executive Summary .................................................................................................................... 1 Key Findings ............................................................................................................................... 2 Conclusions and Recommendations .......................................................................................... 3 Background ................................................................................................................................ 5 Rationalization of Terrorism and Advancement of Antisemitism .............................................. 7 Budget, Transparency and Collaboration ................................................................................. 11 Funding ...................................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • VOICE PO Box 9186, Portland, Oregon 97207 (503) 653-6625 Fosna.Org SEPTEMBER 2009
    The OICE Newsletter of Friends of Sabeel—North America VOICE PO Box 9186, Portland, Oregon 97207 (503) 653-6625 fosna.org SEPTEMBER 2009 Get Involved! Sabeel Conference Message from the Chair Washington, DC The Rev. Richard K. Toll, D. Min., D.D. Pursue Justice—Seek Peace: Chairman, Friends of Sabeel—North America Framing the Discourse- Mobilizing for Action October 1—3, 2009 Summer 2009 was a very busy time for Naim and me as we traveled up and down the west coast for a second book tour and the 76th Sabeel Conference General Convention of the Episcopal Church, a ten-day event held in Cedar Falls, Iowa A Free Palestine & A Secure Anaheim, California. We had events in San Diego, Pasadena, Los Israel: From Occupation to Angeles, San Francisco, Portland and Seattle, selling hundreds of Liberation and Reconciliation copies of Naim’s new book, A Palestinian Christian Cry for October 9-10, 2009 Reconciliation . We are so grateful to our dedicated volunteers in all those areas who worked hard putting together book signing events, Sabeel Fall 2009 Witness Trip Palestine/Israel fundraisers, and media opportunities. Below are some pictures of our Sabeel Fall 2009 International booth at the convention (photos by FOSNA volunteer Jim Bettendorf). October 29-November 6, 2009 A real sign of hope is the obvious increase in organized opposition to Sabeel’s message and Sabeel Conference our efforts to turn the tide of opinion toward a just peace in Palestine/Israel. Everywhere Seattle, Washington February 19-20, 2010 we went, those who continue to actively promote only an Israeli view of realities on the ground attempted to vilify Sabeel and Naim.
    [Show full text]
  • Background and Explanation for the Position Statement of the Iona Community on Palestine/Israel
    Background and explanation for the Position Statement of the Iona Community on Palestine/Israel The Iona Community is an international, ecumenical Christian movement working for Peace and Justice. Since its origins, the Iona Community has supported anti-colonial struggles worldwide; opposed apartheid in South Africa; practised and encouraged nonviolent resistance; expressed practical and political solidarity with the poor and oppressed at home and worldwide as well as focussing on the relationship between personal responsibility and political context in faithfulness to the kingdom of God. Many Iona Community members and associates have been very active in working for justice and peace in Palestine/Israel in a wide range of ways, including: working, serving and ministering in Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territories; enabling and promoting fair trade with Palestinian producers; human rights observer missions including volunteering with the Ecumenical Accompaniment Programme in Palestine and Israel (EAPPI); meeting with and providing support to Palestinian and Israeli groups working for peace with justice; offering hospitality, friendship and solidarity with visiting Palestinians in our homes and our island centres; campaigning in solidarity with the Palestinian people. 1 The Iona Community fully endorses Kairos Palestine: A moment for truth, _ as a cry from the Christian Communities in Palestine in 2009 to the worldwide church and international community. As a worshipping community we seek to play our role in encouraging the churches in the countries where we are based to adopt and act on the call of Kairos Palestine. In particular we are called to scrutinise our own theological assumptions and those of our churches, for any elements which legitimise the ongoing oppression of the Palestinian people in Israel, the occupied Palestinian Territories and amongst the Palestinian diaspora.
    [Show full text]
  • Beyond Interfaith Reconciliation- a New Paradigm for a Theology of Land
    Beyond interfaith reconciliation: A New Paradigm for a Theology of Land Mark Braverman, Ph.D. ABSTRACT The Christian confrontation with the Nazi genocide produced a radical re-evaluation of theology with respect to Christianity’s relationship to the Jewish people. Spurred by horror at the Nazi genocide, and motivated by the urgent need to atone for the sin of Christian anti-Judaism and the perceived complicity with or silence during the Nazi Holocaust, this revisionist movement focused on the repudiation of replacement theology. This revisionism has had profound implications for the current discourse on the political situation in historic Palestine. It directs and frames “interfaith” conversations in the West and promotes church policy designed to protect relationships with the Jewish community at the cost of the church’s social justice mission with respect to human rights in historic Palestine. On a deeper level, this revisionist theology serves to support Christian triumphalist tendencies. Whereas the confrontation with the Nazi Holocaust presented an opportunity to confront this quality in Christianity, Christians instead chose to focus on anti-Semitism as the primary Christian sin. As a result, Christian triumphalism is actually reinforced, through an identification with a rehabilitated Judaism and an affirmation of the exclusivist nature of God’s covenant with the Jewish people. In addition to this reversion to particularism, Christianity’s spiritualization of the land has been disavowed, and a superior Jewish claim to the land is legitimized. The paper discusses the implications of these issues for the development of a theology of land and the current quest for peace in historic Palestine.
    [Show full text]
  • 1 Restoring the Kingdom Iona Abbey Sunday, May 28, 2017 Mark
    Restoring the Kingdom Iona Abbey Sunday, May 28, 2017 Mark Braverman Acts 1:6-14 It’s a joy to be in your midst and I want to thank the Iona community for the honor of preaching from this pulpit. I have learned to clarify the question of my religious identity at the outset when preaching from the pulpit. After returning home to the U.S. from a pilgrimage to Palestine with the Fellowship of Reconciliation in 2006, I began to speak in churches, full of passion about what I had seen and felt. There were no invitations from synagogues – more on that. I found myself being asked, particularly after preaching from the lectionary at a Sunday morning worship, and talking a lot about Jesus, when had I converted? I struggled to answer that question – what did that really mean, I wondered, to “convert?” After a time, I found myself answering in this way: I wish that things had gone differently in the first century so I would not have to be answering that question! I have come more and more to challenge these categories, these divisions between “faith communities.” I feel that it is more and more important to reflect on what unites us rather than divides us. I find myself identifying with Dietrich Bonhoeffer, sitting in a Nazi prison contemplating what had become of his German church, and how betrayed he had felt by the ecumenical movement of his time for failing to confront the heresy into which the German church had fallen. In his very last communications he was questioning how far religion had strayed from spirituality and commitment to the divine.
    [Show full text]
  • God's Unfailing Word
    God’s Unfailing Word Theological and Practical Perspectives on Christian–Jewish Relations The Faith and Order Commission Downloadable version for local non-commercial use. Book available from www.chpublishing.co.uk Published 2019 for the Faith and Order Commission of the Church of England by Church House Publishing Copyright © The Archbishops’ Council 2019 Church House Publishing Church House, Great Smith Street, London, SW1P 3AZ All rights reserved. Other than copies for local, non-commercial use, no part of this publication may be reproduced or stored or transmitted by any means or in any form, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without written permission which should be sought from the Copyright Administrator, The Archbishops’ Council (address above). E-mail: [email protected] “Synagoga and Ecclesia in Our Time” by artist Joshua Koffman was commissioned by Saint Joseph's University in Philadelphia to mark the fiftieth anniversary of the 1965 Second Vatican Council declaration Nostra Aetate and the 1967 founding of the university's Institute for Jewish-Catholic Relations. Used here with permission. British Library Cataloguing in Publication data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library 978 0 7151 1161 1 Printed and bound in Great Britain by The Ludo Press Downloadable version for local non-commercial use. Book available from www.chpublishing.co.uk Contents Preface v Foreword ix Introduction xiii PART 1: THEOLOGICAL FRAMEWORKS 1 1. A Difficult History 3 2. A Distinctive Relationship 23 PART 2: CRITICAL ISSUES 49 3. Mission and Evangelism 51 4. Teaching and Preaching 61 5.
    [Show full text]
  • Middle East Notes Maryknoll Office for Global Concerns November 14, 2013
    Middle East Notes Maryknoll Office for Global Concerns November 14, 2013 Please note: Opinions expressed in the following articles do not necessarily reflect the opinion of the Maryknoll Office for Global Concerns. Read previous weeks’ Middle East Notes here. This week’s Middle East Notes presents articles on the peace talks between Israelis and Palestinians, continued settlement construction, the region’s invisible Christians, control of the Jordan Valley, the “de-development” strategy of the Israeli government towards the Palestinians, Secretary Kerry’s public criticism of Israel’s settlement activities, and other issues. Some of the many issues included in the CMEP Bulletins for November 1 and November 8 highlight olive harvest attacks by settlers, release of Palestinian prisoners and continuing settlement construction, and Secretary Kerry’s frustrations. Mustafa Barghouthi writes in Al Ahram Weekly: “Freedom is not something one can beg for. It is something one must struggle for.” Bradley Burston comments on an interview he had with Uri Avnery who asked the questions: will Israel still exist 90 years from now? Should it? James Zogby in Common Good Forum notes that for decades now, Christians have been the “invisible or ignored victims” of conflicts in the Middle East. Ma’an News Agency reports that PLO official Yasser Abed Rabbo said that Israel is not seriously engaging in peace talks with PLO negotiators: “There is one party negotiating, and that is us, while the other party is not proposing anything that goes in line with international legitimacy and law.” Robert Taft in The Telegraph notes that Benjamin Netanyahu is planning to build a security barrier between the West Bank and Jordan in a move aimed at asserting Israel’s control over the borders of a future Palestinian state.
    [Show full text]
  • To Download Complete Conference Schedule
    The Church of St. Paul and St. Andrew THE CHURCH OF ST. PAUL & ST. ANDREW THE TREE OF LIFE CONFERENCE CONFERENCE PRESENTERS BROADWAY UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST THE RIVERSIDE CHURCH Seeks to amplify voices of conscience—Jewish, Chris- tian, Muslim, and Druze—who are committed to find- Sunday, November 7—10:45AM New York, NY10024 York, New 263 West 86th Street Street 86th 263 West WEST PARK PRESBYTERIAN ing justice and peace together in Israel and Palestine The Riverside Church ADVENT LUTHERAN CHURCH through education and non-violent action. All are con- th JUDSON MEMORIAL CHURCH 490 Riverside Drive at 120 Street cerned with a fundamental question: How can people Worship Service of faith help make the Holy Land the holy place it could be? At the conference, representatives of differ- Preaching, The Rev. Dr. Naim Ateek is the Director ent faiths will address that question, and consider: of Sabeel Ecumenical Liberation Theology Center in Jerusalem. In 1948, his family were forced by Zionist 1) the importance of faith traditions’ emphasis on troops out of their ancestral home in Beisan, and relo- justice as essential to peace; cated in Nazareth. An Episcopal priest, and former 2) the importance of connectivity and solidarity Canon of St. George's Cathedral Church, Rev. Ateek between our communities here and communities holds degrees from Hardin-Simmons Uni- in the Holy Land; versity, the Church Divinity School of the 3) the role in political advocacy of faith communities Pacific, and San Francisco Theological Semi- here in the U.S. nary. He is author of many books, including A Palestinian Christian Cry for Reconcilia- A NEW GENERATION OF PEACEMAKERS tion.
    [Show full text]
  • Tree of Life Electronic Ad 2013
    Tree of Life Concert and Conference Nov. 2 and 3, 2013 Kairos-Milwaukie United Church of Christ 4790 SE Logus Road, Milwaukie, OR To Exist is to Resist: Voices of Conscience on Israel and Palestine About the Conference and Concert To Exist is to Resist. These words can be found on a mural on the 28-foot-tall, concrete wall that imprisons Palestinians, separating them from their families, olive orchards, businesses, universities and places of worship, making it extraordinarily difficult for them to live normal lives. Nevertheless, the people who live within the Wall have distinguished themselves by their resilience, their determination to provide for their families, and their persistence in keeping hope alive from one generation to another. While the barrier has been built by Israel to keep Palestinians apart from Israelis, there are those on both sides of it Israelis and Palestinians who refuse to engage in enmity, and by their very existence oppose the forces that would keep them apart. There is genuine hope for change in their growing non-violent resistance. And there is hope in the growing numbers of corporations, churches, academic institutions, performing artists, unions, human rights organizations and concerned individuals who have come to understand how the Wall and all the other instruments of inhumanity and occupation are impediments to peace. In this, our second Tree of Life Conference and first concert, we will learn from people who have distinguished themselves as voices of resistance and conscience. Perhaps in hearing them, we will emerge as voices of resistance and conscience ourselves, intent on speaking up and out to promote peace in the very troubled Holy Land.
    [Show full text]